The Crawleys are back. After years of speculation, the highly-anticipated Downton Abbeymovie has finally been green-lit by Focus Features and Carnival Films, with production set to begin later this summer. And to keep the good news rolling, the majority of the original cast members, including Maggie Smith, Michelle Dockery, Hugh Bonneville, and more, are set to return for the feature film.

The movie comes from Downton Abbey veterans Julian Fellowes, the series’ creator, and Brian Percival, who directed the pilot episode and will return to direct the film. Downton Abbey producers Gareth Neame and Liz Trubridge will also serve as producers on the new movie. Even though the film is set to begin production within a few months, details about the plot (and the title) are being kept under wraps. Deadline reports that Highclere Castle, the 5,000 acre estate where the show filmed, will return in the movie, but apart from the setting, much is unknown. Will the film pick up where the series left off in 2015? Will it feature a time jump? Right now, it’s up in the air; but wouldn’t you love to see the Crawleys take on the Great Slump (even the British version of the Great Depression sounds more elegant) of the 1930s?

As soon as the show ended, dedicated fans began dreaming that the Downton Abbey cast would reunite for a movie, but it took some time to make that wish a reality. In 2017, Michael Edelstein, president of NBCUniversal International Studios (the show’s production company), confirmed that a movie was “in the works,” saying, “We are working on getting the script right, and then we’ve got to figure out how to get the [cast] together. … But we’re hopeful to make a movie sometime next year.” Clearly, Edelstein’s timeline was correct.

“When the television series drew to a close it was our dream to bring the millions of global fans a movie and now, after getting many stars aligned, we are shortly to go into production,” said producer and Carnival Films’ Executive Chairman Gareth Neame. “Julian’s script charms, thrills and entertains and in Brian Percival’s hands we aim to deliver everything that one would hope for as Downton comes to the big screen.”

A release date for the still-untitled Downton Abbey movie has yet to be set, so if you haven’t seen the series — or if you’re in the mood for a rewatch — you have plenty of time to binge all six seasons.